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Original Articles

Consumer mobility and the communication of difference: Reflecting on cross‐border shopping practices and experiences in the Dutch‐German borderland

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Pages 191-205 | Published online: 21 Nov 2011
 

Abstract

The current debate on consumption and retailing represents shoppers as highly mobile and looking for different experiences. In an attempt to find satisfaction, shoppers are assumed to explore many places and countries. It is in cross‐border regions that large functional, physical, and socio‐cultural differences can be experienced in a relatively small area. Such differences could make crossing national borders appealing as well as unappealing. This contribution scrutinizes what cross‐border shoppers are looking for and what level of “unfamiliarity” they are willing to accept. A brief analysis of cross‐border shopping practices in the EU is combined with a detailed case study of Millingen in the Netherlands and Kranenburg in Germany to explore what shoppers see as (un)appealing. We argue that the knowledge shoppers have of people and places on “the other side” and information that is communicated may (re)arrange differences as “ familiar” and “unfamiliar”. Places promising “ familiar unfamiliarity” seem to appeal to shoppers and therefore generate cross‐border shopping practices. Paradoxically, the construction of borders and the communication of appealing differences seem necessary to sustain and promote shopping mobility.

Notes

Lecturer, Nijmegen Centre for Border Research, Radboud University, Nijmegen, PO Box 9108, 6500 HK Nijmegen, the Netherlands | [email protected]

Lecturer, Urban and Regional Research Centre Utrecht, Utrecht University, PO Box 80115, 3508 TC Utrecht, the Netherlands | [email protected]

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